Wednesday, March 05, 2025

A Republican-lite House Problem Solving Caucus alum was touted by Schumer when picked to give a rebuttal against Trump. She opposes Medicare for All. She's part of the Liz Cheney wing of the tired party. Former spook. Wikipedia tells more.

Touted by Schumer 

They failed to learn a thing from Harass flaming out bad. Or in other words, who picked this middle-roader former spook, Zionist? 

USAToday:

Democrats [nobody in media appears to give names of who picked her, so guess] have put forward Sen. Elissa Slotkin of Michigan to give their party's response.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. called first-term senator Slotkin "nothing short of a rising star in our party," in announcing her role for the address.

While not technically a State of the Union address, as it is called later in the term, Trump's first joint congressional address of this administration will lay out his vision for the nation. Following his address, Slotkin will give the Democrats' rebuttal.

Rising star? So says the Schumer of the United States. Who puts her, in his mind, in a class with Harris. In his mind. The fact is, she's in a class with Gottheimer. By choice. In with Gotthelmer both as a borderline supposed Democrat and as a Zionist. That letter, read it and reflect on how many Gazan civilians have been murdered.

She must have trouble, as a former Iraq war spook, knowing what a war criminal is.

Wikipedia explains

Slotkin was elected to the Senate in 2024, defeating Republican nominee Mike Rogers in a close race.[2] She became the second female senator from Michigan after Debbie Stabenow. She is expected to become Michigan's senior senator when Gary Peters retires in 2027.[3]

Early life and education

Slotkin was born on July 10, 1976 in New York City, the daughter of Curt Slotkin and Judith (née Spitz) Slotkin.[4][5] She is Jewish.[5][6][7] Slotkin spent her early life on a farm in Holly, Michigan. She attended Cranbrook Kingswood School in Bloomfield Hills.[8] Her family farm was part of Hygrade Meat Company, founded by her great-grandfather Samuel Slotkin, who emigrated from Minsk in 1900.[9] Hygrade was the original company behind Ball Park Franks, which is now owned by Tyson Foods.[10]

Slotkin earned a bachelor of arts in sociology from Cornell University in 1998 and a master of international affairs from Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs in 2003.[11]

Early career

Slotkin was recruited by the Central Intelligence Agency after graduate school. Fluent in Arabic and Swahili, she served three tours in Iraq as a CIA analyst. During the George W. Bush administration, she worked on the Iraq portfolio for the National Security Council. [...]

After leaving the Defense Department in January 2017, Slotkin moved back to her family's farm in Holly, where she owned and operated Pinpoint Consulting.[8]

U.S. House of Representatives

In July 2017, Slotkin announced her candidacy for Michigan's 8th congressional district.[13] She said she was motivated to challenge two-term Republican incumbent Mike Bishop when she saw him smile at a White House celebration after he and House Republicans voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act.[14] On August 7, Slotkin defeated Michigan State University criminal justice professor Christopher Smith in the Democratic primary with 70.7% of the vote.[15][16]

In November 2018, Slotkin defeated Bishop with 50.6% of the vote.[1][17] She is the first Democrat to represent Michigan's 8th district since 2001,[17] when Debbie Stabenow gave up the seat to run for the U. S. Senate.

Slotkin's official congressional portrait for the 116th United States Congress

2020

Slotkin was reelected with 50.9% of the vote, defeating Republican Paul Junge.[18]

[...]Due to redistricting, Slotkin's district was renumbered as the 7th district.

She defeated Republican nominee Tom Barrett with 51.5% of the vote to Barrett's 46.5%.[21] The general election was the most expensive U.S. House race of 2022, with Slotkin raising $9.8 million.[22][23]

Slotkin criticized Barrett's stance on abortion, specifically his statement that he is "100% pro-life, no exceptions".[24] She also criticized his multiple votes against incentives for a new General Motors electric vehicle battery plant in Delta Township.[25]

She was endorsed by Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney.[26]

During the campaign, Slotkin signed a seven-month lease on a condominium in Lansing, Michigan. The owner of the condominium was a donor to Slotkin's campaign but the campaign said the lease was at a fair market rate.[27][28] After the election and before her February 2023 divorce, Slotkin moved back to her family farm in Holly, in Michigan's 9th congressional district.[29][30]

Slotkin attributed her victory to "losing better" in the district's Republican-leaning areas.[23] Her win defied trends in other states that resulted in Democrats narrowly losing control of the House of Representatives for the 118th Congress.[23]

Committee assignments

Caucus memberships

U.S. Senate

Elections

2024

On February 27, 2023, Slotkin announced her candidacy in the 2024 Michigan U.S. Senate election after Debbie Stabenow announced that she would vacate the seat.[34] She won the Democratic primary on August 6, 2024, with 76% of the vote and narrowly defeated Republican nominee Mike Rogers[35][36] in the general election, outperforming the top of the ticket.[2]

[...] Committee assignments

Source:[38]

Political positions

Slotkin has been described as a moderate Democrat [a/k/a as a Clinton follower].[39][40][41][42] She was ranked among the most bipartisan members of the House.[43][44][41]

Abortion

In 2024, Slotkin said she supported federal legislation to codify the abortion rights established in Roe v. Wade.[45][46] She was endorsed by pro-choice organizations Reproductive Freedom for All[47] and Planned Parenthood Action Fund[48] during her 2024 race for U.S. Senate.

Campaign finance policy

In 2022, Slotkin co-sponsored the Ban Corporate PACs Act, which, if enacted, would prevent corporations from operating a political action committee.[49]

Criminal justice

Following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota on May 25, 2020, Slotkin co-sponsored and voted for the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020.[50][51][52] She voted in favor of the bill again in 2021.[53][54] Slotkin was the only House Democrat in Michigan who voted for a bill to overturn DC criminal code modernization.[55][56]

Slotkin opposes abolishing the death penalty.[57] She has said it should be used in rare cases.[57]

Flags

In 2023, Slotkin was one of two House Democrats who voted for a Republican-backed amendment that prevented Department of Defense facilities from displaying non-official flags, including the pride flag. After facing criticism for the vote, Slotkin said that it was intended to prevent the flying of "hateful flags [...] particularly the Confederate flag", adding that she would "rather support a no-flag policy than allow hateful imagery above U.S. military bases".[62][63][64]

Foreign policy

Slotkin is a self-described Zionist. She condemned Representative Rashida Tlaib for controversial statements about Palestinians, including using the phrase "from the river to the sea". Slotkin expressed support for the Israeli government's actions amid international allegations of genocide in Gaza.[65] She also signed a letter criticizing South Africa's genocide case against Israel, calling it "grossly unfounded".[66]

[...] 

Gun policy

[...] After the 2023 Michigan State University shooting in her district, Slotkin and Senator Ed Markey introduced the Gun Violence Prevention Research Act.[77][78] The bill would provide $50 million each year for the next five years for research on firearms safety and gun violence prevention by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.[79]

Health care

Slotkin supports the Affordable Care Act. During her 2020 campaign, she said the protection of health care coverage for people with preexisting conditions was the most important issue in her district. She supports allowing Medicare to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies for lower drug prices for those it insures.[80]

Slotkin opposes Medicare for All but supports a buy-in Medicare option.[81]

Impeachment

In September 2019, Slotkin and six other freshman House Democrats authored an opinion piece in The Washington Post calling for an impeachment inquiry into President Trump. Its publication led to widespread Democratic support for an impeachment inquiry.[39][82] Slotkin voted to impeach Trump in both his first and second impeachments.[83][84]

LGBT rights

In both the 116th and 117th Congresses, Slotkin received a 100% rating from Human Rights Campaign's (HRC) Congressional Scorecard, which measures "support for equality" among members of Congress based on their voting record.[85][86] HRC endorsed her in each of her campaigns for the House.[87][88]

Student debt

In 2020, during the Trump administration, Slotkin voted against an amendment, supported by 93% of the Democratic caucus, that would provide $10,000 debt relief for student loan borrowers.[89][90] [...]

Identity politics

After the 2024 presidential election, Slotkin said that identity politics "needs to go the way of the dodo", adding that "people need to be looked at as independent Americans, whatever group they're from, whatever party they may be from."[96]

Personal life

Slotkin married Dave Moore, a retired Army colonel and Apache helicopter pilot, in 2011.[97][98] They had met in Baghdad during Slotkin's third tour in Iraq and lived in Holly.[97][98] The two filed for divorce in 2023.[98] Slotkin had two stepdaughters while married to Moore.[99]

No wonder Schumer loves her. She's as big a loser as he is. And, yes, opinions can differ.

Slotkin's rebuttal speech is available online by transcript, or on YouTube, where demeanor as well as words are given. She brags about having been a spook and cites Ronald Reagan, who privatized us out of a good thing while being an ex-actor.

She characterizes the U.S. as "exceptional," more than once in her 10 minute speech:

I was recruited by the CIA and did three tours in Iraq, alongside the military. In between, I worked at the White House under President Bush and President Obama, two very different leaders who both believed that America is exceptional.

[...] As a Cold War kid, I'm thankful it was Reagan and not Trump in office in the 1980s. Trump would have lost us the Cold War.

Donald Trump's actions suggest that, in his heart, he doesn't believe we are an exceptional nation. He clearly doesn't think we should lead the world.

Look, America's not perfect. But I stand with most Americans who believe we are still exceptional. Unparalleled. And I would rather have American leadership over Chinese or Russian leadership any day of the week.

Calling bullshit, she dumps a load on the current President, than says a non sequitur. U.S., China, and Russia have big militaries, but it's how you used them and she was big time in the Iraq disaster, but proud of it. Who is this flag waver? 

Continuing the bullshit - laying it on with a trowel -

Because for generations, America has offered something better.

Our security and our prosperity, yes. But our democracy, our very system of government, has been the aspiration of the world. And right now, it's at risk.

It's at risk when a president decides he can pick and choose what rules he wants to follow, when he ignores court orders or the Constitution itself, or when elected leaders stand idly by and just let it happen.

But it's also at risk when the President pits Americans against each other, when he demonizes those who are different, and tells certain people they shouldn't be included.

Yes, she is doing exactly that, pitting Americans against each other, as Schumer expected in picking here to counter Trump - two Americans against each other. She is laying it on. More -

Because America is not just a patch of land between two oceans. We are more than that. Generations have fought and died to secure the fundamental rights that define us. Those rights and the fight for them make us who we are.

We are a nation of strivers. Risk-takers. Innovators. And we are never satisfied.

She's describing Elon Musk, risk-taker, innovator. More -

That is America's superpower.

And look, I've lived and worked in many countries. I've seen democracies flicker out. I've seen what life is like when a government is rigged. You can't open a business without paying off a corrupt official. You can't criticize the guys in charge without getting a knock at the door in the middle of the night.

So as much as we need to make our government more responsive to our lives today, don't for one moment fool yourself that democracy isn't precious and worth saving.

She melds "superpower" neo-con BS with "democracy ... worth saving." Huh? Trump was elected in an election she does not call rigged, and now Trump as our leader means "democracy" needs "saving?" Because Harris ran a shitty campaign and her losing her contest and both Houses of Congress threatens "democrach?" 

WTF, that is inflamatory rhetoric, over the top, her girl lost, MY GOD!! That threatens "democracy!" More -

But how do we actually do that? I know a lot of you have been asking that question.

First, don't tune out. It's easy to be exhausted, but America needs you now more than ever. If previous generations had not fought for democracy, where would we be today?

Where would we be, and that's where we are. With Trump as President, JD as VP, and Elon Musk being questionable.

Second, hold your elected officials, including me, accountable. Watch how they're voting. Go to town halls and demand they take action. That's as American as apple pie.

Those old enough and with a memory will recall Rap Brown saying, "Violence is as American as Cherry Pie." One pie or another retire that sorry cliche. More -

Three, organize. Pick just one issue you're passionate about — and engage. And doom scrolling doesn't count. Join a group that cares about your issue, and act. And if you can't find one, start one.

My issue is Medicare for All, a winner if there was one, and you, Elissa, dump on the idea. You do. My issue. So give me advice from that perspective? Presumptous is the only word coming to mind. More -

Some of the most important movements in our history have come from the bottom up.

Bottom up. Why Bernie Sanders draws massive crowds, which Hillary failed to do. 

More -

In closing, we all know that our country is going through something right now. We're not sure what the next day is going to hold, let alone the next decade.

But this isn't the first time we've experienced significant and tumultuous change as a country. I'm a student of history, and we've gone through periods of political instability before. And ultimately, we've chosen to keep changing this country for the better.

Jeffrey Sachs is a student of history, again giving this link, 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hA9qmOIUYJA

and he, unlike others, is honest about policy since the Soviet Union fell, and the neocons beat their chests over the sole superpower while the picture Ms. Slotkin paints is not the same one Sachs describes. 

His is more thoughtful, reasoned, adult, and true. 

Slotkin's wrap-up -

But every single time, we've only gotten through those moments because of two things: Engaged citizens and principled leaders.

Engaged citizens who do a little bit more than they're used to doing to fight for the things they care about. And principled leaders who are ready to receive the ball and do something about it.

So thank you tonight for caring about your country. Just by watching, you qualify as engaged citizens. And I promise that I, and my fellow Democrats, will do everything in our power to be the principled leaders that you deserve.

We are not exceptional, except that we've a big military, and we were the materiel supplier at a profit during WW II when Europeans were at war with one another, and since then, we've had a big economic advantage slowly eroding. And we've pushed other people around, war after war - including spook Slotin's three spook tours in the Iraq incursion. 

Today, rich folks pay minimal tax, while a humongous part of the federal budgets are debt service, and the dollar today has been cheapened from the dollar yesterday, and the can gets kicked down the road. 

Debt financing is use because the rich do not want to pay fair taxes, and tomorrow it may be faced, but spending less on war, which however it shakes out Ukraine-wise, is a better idea than Vietnam, time after time, details varying but accepted by the general citizenry more without a draft, as was the great evil then.

So, no idea what Trump said, taking ten times what Slotkin needed to rebut, but the rebuttal, like the Harris campaigning, sucked. As Bernie has lectured, if you want to win, give people what they want, and billionaire Musk chopping heads so his taxes are lower and he's regulated less is one hell of a sick answer to anything.

Bet rank and file citizens seeing much if any of advantage, that's been killed by both parties of the two party stranglehold while we've been lied to as Slotkin does and Sachs describes. Biden did have four years, and did better than I'd expected, but my view is in line with Sachs, and has me a skeptic of Ms. Sen. Slotkin's flagwave and pecuniary scare. 

...............................................

Of interest, two Jewish media outlets -- Forward and JTA -- tout Slotkin's Jewishness, and her Ball Park Franks family fortune from which she benefited, JTA going on :

Slotkin’s responsibility on Tuesday night will be to rebut Trump’s State of the Union-like speech, which is likely to focus on the president’s policy priorities.

On one of them, immigration, Slotkin has a riveting family story of her own.

Slotkin was born in New York City but grew up largely on her family’s land in Holly, Michigan, where she lives today. Her grandfather bought the land when he moved the headquarters of the family business, Hygrade, from New York.

Founded in 1914 by Slotkin’s great-grandfather Samuel, a Jewish immigrant from Minsk, Hygrade was a pioneer in processed and packaged meats whose contributions included Ball Park Franks, still the most-sold hot dogs in the country.

Samuel Slotkin was the subject of a two-part New Yorker profile in 1956, when the multimillionaire, then around 70, still lived in New York City. According to the profile, he was one of nine children of a Talmudic scholar in Koidanov, a town outside Minsk that was a center of Hasidic Judaism in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Samuel, a hustler from birth, bristled at the family’s expectations and sought to leave Russia to make his fortune in the United States. Too young to get a passport, he decided to emigrate despite his parents’ wishes, swimming across a river to evade German and Russian border police, and hitchhiked across Germany to Holland. The year was 1900, and he was 14.

“When Slotkin, with a dollar eighty left in his pocket, sailed from Holland to America, which at that time admitted immigrants without passports, he had neither the intention nor the desire to become the head of a meat-packing company and make millions,” the profile says. Instead, he thought of himself as an artist but fell into business through the influence of an older brother, then embarked on a series of ventures that steadily expanded his reach in the meat industry.

Samuel Slotkin had come during a peak period in a wave of Jewish immigration from Eastern Europe to the United States. At least seven of his eight siblings arrived Stateside, according to genealogical records, and his father was buried in New Jersey.

In 1924, Congress passed the Johnson-Reed Act, severely limiting immigration and effectively closing U.S. doors to Jews from Eastern Europe on the eve of mass persecution. Most Koidanov Hasids were murdered in the Holocaust.

Elissa Slotkin ran into the great-grandson of Samuel’s brother on the way to being sworn in. She took her oath of office on a book of Torah commentary by women published by the Reform Jewish movement, with which her family has been affiliated.

Slotkin had begun her career working at the CIA, where she served multiple tours in Iraq. In 2018, a wave year for Democrats during Trump’s first term, she won election to Congress, where she emphasized bipartisanship, occasionally crossing party lines to vote with Republicans. A recipient of support from PACs affiliated with the pro-Israel lobby AIPAC, she has voted since Oct. 7, 2023, for Israel-related measures that divided her Democratic colleagues, such as to fund Israel’s military and to equate anti-Zionism and antisemitism.

Hygrade was founded and prospered at around the same time socialist Upton Sinclair wrote The Jungle. Where that fits via Hygrade is a guess, but as to Samuel's Horatio Alger story as touted by JTA, the Slotkin transcript only mentions immigration once - I did a word search - saying this:

But securing the border without actually fixing our broken immigration system is dealing with the symptom not the disease. America is a nation of immigrants. We need a functional system, keyed to the needs of our economy, that allows vetted people to come and work here legally. So I look forward to the President's plan on that.

Because here's the thing: Today's world is deeply interconnected. Migration, cyber threats, AI, environmental destruction, terrorism — one nation cannot face these issues alone. We need friends in all corners — and our safety depends on it.

"Vetted people?" That's not what Biden/Harris ran, and the heavy border traffic apparently was vetted by the Mexican cartels, who allowed Central Americans to cross their nation if paying the cartels' price, a situation which Trump trumpeted.

Friends: Luckily we have friends such as Israel. Not friends such as Russia? Did Sachs not mention that at one point Putin quizzed Clinton about Russia in NATO and Clinton got back to him that his people would not allow it? Listen again, if you missed that. Who does the vetting and what criteria are determinative? Musk likes super bright Indian graduates who come in on HB-1 vetting, but that would be of little help to today's Samuel Slotkin, or today's Elon Musk, who sneaked in.

Slotkin wholly ducks the issue. Harris lost, ducking that issue. Trump won beating his chest over it where the white young males viewed it as a rallying cry to their whiteness and wishes.

And Slotkin ducked. Courage? You decide. The JTA folks seemed to expect something other than Slotkin's noticeably brief immigration ruminations.

Why we might need a Second Cold War against Russia with the neocon warriors hot to trot is not necessarily a clear thing, while apparently clear to Slotkin. Because we are exceptional. We are high atop a citidel of righteousness.

But with an immigration argument from Sotkin? MIA.

.......................................................

Do view that Jeffrey Sachs item. Like it. Hate it. But know what he said. Neocon is not a favored Sachs' flavor.

In closing, Facebook

___________UPDATE____________

Bernie took twice as long as Slotkin giving the speech she couldn't give, and did not care to give anyway because she a millionaire meat processing heiress.

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2IlIol6a1EY

And Schumer can kiss my ass if he doesn't like it to be said. Which he does not like at all. Schumer is not a part of any solution. Learn that or keep getting fucked.

End of story.